WB has shifted around a few of their upcoming movies, and announced a couple new ones.

First, Wonder Woman has moved up from June 23, 2017 to June 2, 2017. It is the second film on WB and DC’s upcoming film slate, behind this August’s Suicide Squad.

Second, director Andy Serkis’ Jungle Book: Origins has been pushed a full year from Oct. 6, 2017, to Oct. 19, 2018. On his Facebook page, Serkis says he’s “thrilled” by the news. “The ambition for this project is huge,” he writes. “What we are attempting is an unprecedented level of psychological and emotional nuance in morphing the phenomenal performances of our cast into the facial expressions of our animals. We are breaking new ground with realistic non-humanoid animal faces, such as a panther or wolf, ensuring that they convincingly communicate with human language and emotion via performance capture, and are able to stand up to real scrutiny in richly complex dramatic scenes.”

The release date was probably pushed to distance the film from Disney’s The Jungle Book, which opens later this month and is receiving great reviews.

Second, WB has added two mystery DC films to their slate. They are scheduled to open Oct. 5, 2018, and Nov. 1, 2019.

Here is the DC release date slate as of today of April 6, 2016:

– August 5, 2016: Suicide Squad
– June 2, 2017: Wonder Woman
– November 17, 2017: Justice League, Part 1
– March 16, 2018: The Flash
– July 27, 2018: Aquaman
– October 5, 2018: Mystery DC Film
– April 5, 2019: Shazam
– June 14, 2019: Justice League, Part 2
– November 1, 2019: Mystery DC Film
– April 3, 2020: Cyborg
– June 19, 2020: Green Lantern Corps

It’ll be interesting to see which characters will fill these two new slots. Presumably one of them is a solo Batman movie starring Ben Affleck, a project that has been rumored to be in the works at Warner Brothers thanks in part to Ben’s well-received role as Batman in Dawn of Justice. Who knows what the other one could be. A Wonder Woman sequel? A Suicide Squad sequel? A new character?

For a comprehensive list of DC and Marvel movies hitting theaters between now and 2020, click here.

In related news, THR reported this morning that Warner Brothers is considering creating fewer movies and focusing more on their tentpole properties: DC, Lego, and the Wizarding World. “Warners long has been known for its commitment to filmmaker- and star-driven projects, but sources see signs of a change in culture, though the studio denies there is one. Several executives and agents say Warners seems to be greenlighting fewer homegrown movies as it focuses on silos that echo those that generate so many hits for Disney (Marvel, Lucasfilm, Pixar and Disney Animation),” says the report.